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![]() The recession forced me to take a job for the first time in 10 years. I was lucky enough to get one last fall and even more fortunate to end up working with several hams, ham wanna-be's, and a fellow who ran an Air Force combat-comm unit in his last job. We were knocking boat-anchors around the Pepsi machine, solving the world's problems and a couple things came up. What's the most complex radio or piece of electronics that you've scratch built? For me it was probably the Handbook two tube electronic keyer from the '60's. I've build a lot of kits and repaired stuff but most of my radios were commercial. What is your favorite radio, if you could have only one, what would it be? I'd probably say KWM-2A even though I've never owned one and likely never will. I have near-zero interest in modern digital, computerized radios. I like the SB-Heathkits because they are Collins knock-offs, good VFO's, easy to work on, etc. I'm not an antiquarian, even though I'm in my mid-50's and was first licensed in 1963, I have a recent M.S. Computer Science (1992 - the George Washington University, School of Engineering and Applied Science) and hand build software for a living. I'm as state-of-the-art as they come, I just don't see the point of digital radios. We talked about how the bands are "empty", nothing like they were in the '60s'. Even two is a wasteland, only a few QSO's going. I suggested that we need something like Straight Key Night but for boatanchors. This might rebuild the interest in ham radio. The magic of older radios is that you can get into them and fix them. You don't learn by harrumphing with the geezers on 75 meter LSB. I listen to them while I work on my Heathkits and some of that dag-nabbit'ing is embarrassing. I realize that at 55 (or is it 56), I'm closing in on my golden-years so I'll soon be there, 75 LSB. I'm glad that they are on 75 meters, I just wish that there was more activity on the other bands, 10, 15. We knocked around a few more concepts. I'd like to see the bar lowered. The current entry ticket, the no-code Tech might be too high a barrier. We discussed something like the old Novice theory and no-code for 2 meters and 40, 15 meter CW and 50 kHz of 10 meter SSB, 100 watts. Current no-code tech's grandfather to some HF priviledges and retain all the current tech freqs. Tech-plus and General become Generals. Just upgrade them in the computer. So Tech-plus gets HF SSB. Advanced is grandfathered. Extra stays the same but for the life of me, I can't get over the concept of a 5 WPM, question-pool Extra. I say that as someone with FCC 13 WPM and the original Advanced theory exam. I'm shaking my head ruefully. But that's half the problem. The other half is getting folk talking on the air and working on their radios because that's how they learn. I don't think that reading the spec sheet on an ICOM counts as intellectual stimulation or a technical challenge. I do have an ICOM multi-mode, synthesized, computer controlled radio. I've used it for a few hours. So here's our concept. Boat Anchor Weekend - a contest like any other but you get multipliers for operating older radios. You get double points for contacting stations that are more than 25 years old. Perhaps QCWA would sponsor a Quarter Century Radio Night. Any 24 hours in a weekend, multipler of 1 for 1990+, multiplier of 1.25 for 1980-1989, multiplier of 1.5 for 1970-1979, multiplier of 1.75 for 1960-1969, etc. The older your rig, the more multipliers you get. Max is 3X for 100% homebrew. Multiplier of 1 for digital readout, multiplier of 1.25 for analog readout. Multiplier of 1 for solid state. Multiplier of 1.25 for all vacuum tubes. Rectifiers don't count. Final tubes only count as solid state. Outboard digital readouts can be disabled. Hybred stations, say a vacuum tube transceiver and a solid state linear, lose the vacuum tube multiplier. Station age is determined by the age of the youngest major part. An HT-37 and a new ICOM R-70 receiver is a new station, no multiplier. The point is to get the older, more interesting, radios working. Boat Anchor Weekend, Quarter Century Radio Night, stations lit by vacuum tubes, ... "Rig here is a 1960's Heathkit SB-101 so you get 2 points... " "That old Heath sounds good, I'm running a 1960's Drake 2B and an HT 32, 2 points for you too." If we keep the boatanchors going, make it a national activity, we can rebuild the original interest in Ham Radio. We're competing against the Internet and 160 channel cable TV. Isn't it better to get kids of all ages into hamming???? -- de ah6gi/4 - Cory - restoring old Heathkits because... |
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